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The Bottleneck In Horror Literature [ Home ][ Up ]
Author: The Butcher
Article:
Horror writers use many techniques to heighten the terror in
their work. One of my favorites is the bottleneck. As with
traffic jams, the bottleneck is that point at which the road
narrows, trapping motorists for hours. The same applies to the
horror story. A bottleneck is any enclosed area in which
potential victims are trapped while the monsters-- be they
supernatural horrors or crazed human killers-- prowl around
outside. It is one of the oldest formulas but the bottleneck can
prove useful to this day.
The device dates back to the first horror novels, the Gothics of
the 18th Century. Horace Walpole created a craze with his Castle
of Otranto. The basic plot of the Gothic was a beautiful young
woman is trapped in a creepy castle with a horny old baron who
wants to make her his wife. For different reasons she can’t flee
but has to wait for the young peasant boy (who is the real heir
to the castle) to rescue her. As silly as most Gothics read
today, they did capitalize on feelings of entrapment, using
castles, forests, caves, subterranean tunnels and dungeons as
bottlenecks.
But why bother with the limiting the space your story takes
place in today? Why not have your horrors run anywhere they
like? While this is certainly possible, the modern horror writer
can find the smaller space of the bottleneck useful. For one it
allows you to focus on a smaller group of characters.
Descriptions of large groups of people being killed can be
horrible-- such as the Martians in The War of the Worlds feeding
off the living blood of captured humans, injecting it directly
into their bodies -- it is not often horrifying. For that the
reader needs to get to know the characters so that their terror,
their deaths, can be felt on a personal level, like in Michael
Shea’s “The Autopsy” in which the main characters are a single
infected person and the alien cancer affecting him. A good
example of the opposite is the sub-genre of the adventure story
known as “the disaster story” in which tidal waves, meteors or
global warming destroy whole cities. While fun to witness from
afar, it is only when the writer focuses on smaller groups
within that event that the story can be more than news
reporting.
Another benefit of the bottleneck is that it limits the playing
field, as in a mystery story. To play by the rules of the
mystery, the reader should know all potential suspects and not
be ignorant of any clues. The horror story works in a similar
way. If the tale takes place at an ice-locked Antarctic base,
like John W. Campbell’s classic “Who Goes There?” we don’t have
to worry about the victims running from locale to locale, each
requiring another description, and tiring the reader’s patience.
The same is true of characters. New characters showing up
endlessly through the plot only delays the whole point of the
story, which is: scare me! We want to realize the stage, then
see the actors, and finally follow the story unfold. To have to
stop and begin over and over is disruptive and should be done
only for very special reasons.
Some bottlenecks allow the characters a chance to hope. If the
characters can succeed in stopping the antagonist, be it a
person or a virulent plague, then the terrible fate of the world
may be forestalled. This has been a major theme in the Alien
films. All four films use a bottleneck strategy: a mining-ship,
a remote planet, a prison moon and finally a scientific space
station. If the characters survive, they might, just might,
contain the contagion of the alien life forms. Of course, the
writer has the option of the characters succeeding or failing.
Bottlenecks are often tailored to the monster’s advantage. In
Jaws the attacker is a shark while the humans are trapped on a
sinking boat. In “The Wendigo” by Algernon Blackwood and
“Leiningan Versus the Ants” by Carl Stephenson vast areas of
wilderness become bottlenecks through their immensity. Haunted
houses afford the baddies secret passages, tunnels and
trapdoors. Perhaps the ultimate bottleneck is the clockwork
house in the remake of Thirteen Ghosts. Such gimmicks can be too
contrived, for mad scientists can’t go around building abattoir
in every neighborhood. But the writer who builds the reasoning
slowly may succeed in convincing the reader of any fantastic
idea. Sometimes simple is best as in Stephen King’s Cujo, where
a woman and her baby are trapped in a car by a rabid dog.
The writer is free to put the bottleneck to any purpose they
choose, though it is the struggle within the plot that will
attract the reader’s lasting attention. Hitchcock stuck several
people together in Lifeboat. The sea story is not remarkable but
the study of those characters under stress is engaging. Another
cinematic bottleneck classic is the original Night of the Living
Dead in which a handful of people are trapped in an old
farmhouse. While the zombies surround the house, those
barricaded inside go through a crucible of sorts, each reacting
according to his or her nature. The brave are brave, while the
weak are confronted with their weakness. Ultimately everyone
gets eaten whether weak or strong. The story is not so much
about zombies eating people as it is about the quality of the
characters. It would be more difficult to put the characters
through this unveiling purpose outside a bottleneck.
One author who specialized in bottleneck stories was William
Hope Hodgson. In “A Tropical Horror”, “From a Tideless Sea”,
“The Finding of the Graiken”, “The Derelict”, “A Voice in the
Night”, The Boats of Glen Carig, The Ghost Pirates, he has
travelers trapped inside ships or on islands in the tangled
weeds of the Sargasso Sea. The attackers might be squiggly
terrors, man-eating mold, pirate ghosts or giant crabs or
squids. He does a similar trick in The House on the Borderland
in which a man and his sister trapped inside a house surrounded
by pig monsters, and again on the largest scale in The Night
Land, in which all of humanity dwells in a huge redoubt,
surrounded by an entire world of ab-human horrors. Hodgson’s
best tales are always bottleneck stories.
Several authors have succeeded in making the entire universe
appear like a bottleneck. The novels of Cornell Woolrich, which
set the pattern for film noir, often trap a protagonist in a web
of lies that slowly constrict like a noose. The entire world
appears to be in opposition, forcing the protagonist to some
dark fate. Richard Matheson’s lone remaining human in I, Legend,
lives in a world inhabited by vampires. His home is an actual
bottleneck but his life in a larger context is one as well. Eric
Frank Russell’s Sinister Barrier and many of the works of Philip
K. Dick have questioned the truth of reality, a kind of
existential bottleneck. From these mental prisons there can be
little rescue.
Ultimately it is up to the writer to make this old-fashioned
tool work in new and less obvious ways. In a weird Western,
“Heller” (The Midnight Posse, 2004) there is an undead
gunslinger following his killer, a deputy sheriff named Brett
Hope. The Heller moves slowly so he can be easily avoided, but
when Hope is unlawfully arrested and put in jail he can only
wait for the evil shambler to come to the one-horse town,
seeking his revenge. The town becomes a bottleneck in which the
hero must not only defeat the undead but a sadistic sheriff and
his cronies. The device may not be obvious in the tale, but its
effects are there, placing the hero in a tough spot that is
hopefully fun to watch him escape from.
About the author:
The Butcher is a member and owner of the BGG Horror Forum and
horror movies message board located at
http://bgghorrorforum.proboards57.com Discussion includes
splatter horror, classic horror films, upcoming horror movies
and the latest in horror news. You may repost this article as
long as all links and original content are included.